The mahogany doors didn't just close; they sealed.
I stood in the center of the plush, silent office, my fingers trembling as I clutched the edge of the folder that contained my father’s ruin. Outside, the world still thought I was Elena Vance, the "Princess of Lagos," the girl who had everything. But in this room, under the cold, predatory gaze of Jace Thorne, I was just a debtor.
"Sit, Elena."
Jace didn't look up from the document she was signing. She was draped in a black silk blouse that looked like liquid shadow, her dark hair pulled back into a spine-chillingly perfect bun. She didn't offer a chair; she pointed to a low, velvet ottoman at the corner of her desk. It was a seat for a child. Or a servant.
"I prefer to stand," I said, trying to summon the ghost of my family’s pride.
Jace stopped writing. The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating, and charged with an electric tension. She looked up slowly, her eyes—darker than the obsidian desk—locking onto mine. She didn't look angry. She looked bored, which was far more terrifying.
"You are here because your father traded his company’s future for a gamble he lost," Jace said, her voice a low, melodic hum that made the hair on my arms stand up. "I bought that debt this morning. Which means, as of 9:00 AM, I own the roof over your head, the car you drove here, and the very clothes on your back. You don't have the luxury of 'preferring' anything."
She leaned back, her fingers steepling beneath her chin. "Sit. Now."
My knees felt like water. I sat. The ottoman was so low I was forced to look up at her, a physical manifestation of the power she now held over my life.
"Your father expects me to bail him out," Jace continued, her gaze dropping to the silver necklace I wore—a delicate Vance heirloom. "I have no interest in saving a sinking ship. But I am interested in the crew. Specifically, you."
She reached across the desk, her hand—clad in a thin, black leather glove—sliding a new contract toward me. "This isn't a loan agreement, Elena. It’s a Title of Ownership. You will work for me. You will live where I tell you. You will dress as I command. You will learn the business from the dirt up, and you will do it under my absolute supervision."
I looked at the bold letters at the top: UNCONDITIONAL ASSOCIATE AGREEMENT.
"And if I refuse?" I whispered.
"Then your father goes to prison for the embezzlement he committed to cover his tracks," Jace replied, her tone as casual as if she were discussing the weather. She stood up, walking around the desk until she was standing directly over me. She reached down, her gloved thumb catching the chain of my necklace and tugging it until I had to tilt my head back.
"I don't want your money, Elena. You don't have any. I want your discipline. I want to see if I can break that 'Princess' out of you and find something worth keeping." She leaned in, her breath hot against my ear. "I am a very strict mistress, Elena. If you sign this, your life is no longer yours. But your father stays free. Decide. I have a merger at ten."
I looked at the pen. I looked at the woman who looked like she wanted to both destroy me and save me. I reached out, my hand shaking, and signed my life away.